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PHONE PRIVACY
Through e-mail, [email protected] writes:
|
| > A 1-900 number to ensure non-tracibility. Does anyone have this number?
|
| I would not trust this for hiding from law enforcement.
[ ... ]
I wouldn't either. Anybody with a bit of sense shouldn't trust
something like that. If anything, it's likely a setup to
attract certain types of callers anyways.
| If not law enforcement, then who do you need this to hide from?
| You can use a pay fone to fool caller-id boxes. Well, I guess
| they dont hide the city.
[ ... ]
Well, let's not assume someone wants to hide, but what about
assuring the privacy of the phone call? Afterall, this is
what we use PGP for: for email privacy... though there has
been speculation about just how secure this is.
I correspond with people all over the world. If the government
is keeping a tab on people that correspond and is watching their
email, then they must know me pretty well. They can't be
too concerned that I'm using PGP to correspond with someone
in Moscow. It's been over a year, and noone's came knocking
on my door. ;)
Back to the subject:
What about phone privacy? In this day and age, how can we
absolutely guarantee a private phone call? Even if we are
using voice-encryption tech, the call can still be traced.
I think even more quickly than we are lead to believe. For
example, I never bought the notion that they had to keep
the call on for a certain amount of time before an actual
trace could be performed. Maybe in the stone-age of Ma Bell,
but not today. I suppose if one were able to use a setup
like a remailer only on a phone network, whereby you got
your call forwarded through different places to prevent a
trace (doubt that's reasonably accomplished), it might make
the trace a bit more difficult.
There doesn't appear to be anything even cryptographically
that we can do other than encrypting the voice and selectively
using pay fones. It would be neat if there were some way to
interfere with Ma Bell's computer, in a non-destructive way,
to alter what information they get when we dial out. For instance,